California-Nevada Chapter American Fisheries

Schedule at a Glance
Day
Time
8:30am - 12:00pm
Hotel Paradox
Sequoia B
Sequoia C
Auditorium
CE 1 - Presentation Skills
8:30am - 12pm
CE 2- PIT Tagging Workshop
9am - 12pm
CE 4 - CDFW SCP and Federal
Permit Procedures Workshop
9am - 12pm
Symposium
Lunch
12:00 - 1:00pm
Wed.
April 8th
1:00 - 5:00pm
CE 3 - Endangered Species
Act Section 7 Consultation
1pm - 5pm
CE 4 - CDFW SCP and Federal
Permit Procedures Workshop
(contin.)
1pm - 4pm
Poster Session and Social - Sequoia D and Grove Room
7:00 - 10:00pm
Student-Sponsored BBQ - Long Marine Laboratory
8:15 - 11:45am
Plenary Session
Sequoia A-C
Restoration or
Reconciliation? Tidal
Wetlands, Fishes, and
Estuaries in California
9am - 3:40pm
Student-Mentor Lunch
2. Great White Sharks:
Recent Advances in
Understanding Behavior
and Habitat Use
1:00 - 3:00pm
3. Linkage between the
4. Ecology and Conservation
Sacramento River and northern
of Winter-Run Chinook
tributaries Salmon
Fish response to management
1:00-3:20
1. Student Symposium
5. Going with the Flow:
Maintaining Linkages in
Regulated River Systems
3:20 - 5:00pm
6. Native Species
6:00 - 7:00pm
Social - Hotel Paradox Pool Deck
7:00 - 10:00pm
Banquet, Awards, Raffle - Sequoia A-C
8:00 - 10:00am
10:20 - 11:40am
Friday
April 10th
CE 2- PIT Tagging Workshop
(contin.)
1pm - 5pm
5:00 - 7:00pm
11:45am - 1:00pm
Thursday
April 9th
RCN
Sequoia A
8. Monitoring Matters:
Making Informed
Management Decisions
9. Estuaries and Lagoons
12. Monitoring, Management
13. Techniques and Technologies
and Metapopulation
10. Challenges for Salmonid
Recovery in Altered Systems
14. Human-Assisted Methods
for Fish Reintroductions
7. Chinook Salmon
3:40-5:00
11. Monitoring and
mitigating impacts from
California's continuing
drought
Cal-Neva ExComm Business Meeting - RCN Auditorium
12:00 - 1:30pm
1:40 - 3:00pm
15. Sandy Watersheds,
16. Causes and Consequences of
Salmonids and Salamanders
Life History Evolution
17. Defining Fish Habitat
3:20 - 4:20pm
CAL-NEVA 49TH ANNUAL MEETING
1
April 8
Resource Center for Nonviolence
Time
Auditorium
Restoration or Reconciliation?
Tidal wetlands, fishes, and estuaries in California
9:00am
9:10am
9:30am
9:50am
10:10am
10:30am
10:50am
11:00am
11:20am
11:40aam
12:00pm
12:20pm
12:40pm
2:00pm
2:20pm
2:40pm
3:00pm
3:20pm
James Hobbs, Stacy Sherman, Dave Contreras
Introduction
James Hobbs
More conceptual models of tidal wetland restoration? The process of building them is as important as the
product
Rosemary Hartman
Development of a standardized monitoring plan for tidal wetlands in the San Francisco Estuary
Stacy Sherman
Breaching the levee between science and reality: tidal wetland restoration in the Sacramento/San
Joaquin Delta and Suisun Marsh
Erik Loboschefsky
Dutch Slough restoration
Bruce Herbold
Implementing large-scale tidal marsh restoration in a stressed ecosystem: how to overcome the
challenges
Lenny Grimaldo
BREAK
Landscape-scale aquatic reconciliation in the North Delta Arc
Amber D. Manfree
Trophic relay and fish movement patterns in a remnant tidal marsh
Denise P. DeCarion
Larval growth rates of Sacramento Splittail, Pogonichthys macrolepidotus, via otolith microstructure
analysis
Felipe A. La Luz
Diets of two alien predators - adult Striped Bass and White Catfish - in Suisun Marsh
Teejay O'Rear
Fish food factory: Differences in productivity between a restoring tidal marsh and a managed wetland
Brian O. Williamson
LUNCH
Use of adaptive management in the South San Francisco Bay Salt Pond Restoration Program in California
John Bourgeois
Lessons learned from restoring solar evaporation ponds in the San Francisco Estuary
James Hobbs
Challenges and adaptations to persistence in dynamic environments: Tidewater Goby in northern
California lagoons
Michael Hellmair
The function of west coast estuaries as nurseries: synthesizing their role and identifying critical
information gaps
Steven Y. Litvin
Closing Comments
James Hobbs
5-7 pm
Poster Session and Social - Sequoia C-D and Grove Room
7-10 pm
Student-hosted BBQ - Long Marine Laboratory
Wednesday
CAL-NEVA 49TH ANNUAL MEETING
2
April 9 Afternoon
Hotel Paradox
Sequoia A
Time
1. Student Symposium
Denise DeCarion
1:00
1:20
1:40
2:00
2:20
2:40
Sequoia B
2. Great White Sharks:
3. Linkage between the Sacramento
Sequoia C
Auditorium
Recent Advances in Understanding
River and northern tributaries:
Behavior and Habitat Use
Fish response to management
4. Ecology and Conservation of
Winter-Run Chinook Salmon
Cynthia LeDoux-Bloom
Steven C. Zeug
Genetics of White Sharks in the Northeastern
Pacific
Dams, fish, rocks and water - An update on the Battle
Creek restoration efforts
Evaluating feasibility of winter-run Chinook
reintroduction upstream of Shasta Dam
Amanda Nicole Netburn
Quantifying abiotic habitat characteristics to
determine thresholds for salmonid oversummer survival in intermittent streams
Cleo Woelfle-Erskine
Carol A. Reeb
Modeling shark attack data to infer patterns of shark
abundance: a case study on the California white
shark population
Francesco Ferretti
Laurie A. Earley
Mill Creek Spring-Run Chinook- Efforts to reverse the
trend in declining abundance
John Hannon
Expansion of the Winter Chinook Conservation
Hatchery Program during California's ongoing drought
with implications to the natural-spawning population.
Robert Null
Juvenile fall and spring-run Chinook Salmon
reach-specific survival and route selection
through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Gabriel P Singer
Feeding microhabitat use and movements of
juvenile Mugil cephalus in a Hawaiian stream.
Estimating apparent survival of White Sharks in
Central California using photo ID mark-recapture
Hitting claydirt! Clear Creek - A gold nugget of the
Sacramento River fall-run Chinook population.
Kauaoa Fraiola
The Influence of drought on an intermittent
stream food web in coastal California
Aaron B. Carlisle
White sharks without borders: Migratory
connectivity across the Mexico-USA boundary
Scott Blankenship
Distribution and fate of winter-run Chinook Salmon in
the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Kristina Cervantes-Yoshida
Salvador J. Jorgensen
Sarah Austing
Small dam removal and low-impact power generation
upgrades in a remote area of South Fork Cottonwood
Creek
Joey Howard
Fish & Food: How habitat and trophic subsidies
structure resource use in the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta
Matthew J. Young
Exponential increase in rate of white shark attacks
on sea otters in central California: demographic
consequences and possible causes.
Tim Tinker
The Passage Assessment Database: a Tool for Restoring
Stream Habitat Connectivity
Inferring Sacramento winter Chinook salmon ocean
spatial distributions from coded-wire tag and genetic
data
Will Satterwaite
Matthew R Johnson
Navigating the drought: movement and survival of
acoustically-tagged juvenile winter Chinook Salmon
through California's Central Valley to the Pacific Ocean
Paul E. Kanive
James T. Earley
Jason Hassrick
Using stable isotope analysis to inform tracking data Straying of hatchery salmon released on-site:
Application of Genetic Methods To Salvaged ESA-listed
in eastern North Pacific white sharks.
management implications of a large mitigation hatchery Chinook Salmon
Anne Elston
Steven C. Zeug
Break
1. Student Symposium (contin.)
5. Going With The Flow: Maintaining
Linkages in a Changing Climate
6. Native Species
Scott Wilcox
Wayne Lifton
Matthew J. Young
3:20 Inference of historical Sacramento River winter
Chinook fishing mortality rates over the past 35 years
Michael O'Farrell
3:20
The influence of habitat characteristics on
juvenile coho salmon abundance and growth in
constructed off-channel habitats in the middle
Klamath
subbasin
Michelle River
R. Krall
Relationships between mobile post-dam gravel
Study of Changes in Flow Regime on Hardhead in the
deposits, geomorphic controls, high flow
Middle Fork Fork Stanislaus River
hydraulics, and modeled juvenile salmonid rearing
habitat
on the Trinity River-implications for a
Scott McBain
Larry Wise
3:40
The Impacts of polystyrene plastic and
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons on the
development of Zebrafish
Rosalyn T. Lam
Using targeted flow releases in regulated rivers to
improve migration success and decrease disease
risk for adult salmonids
Joshua S. Strange
Western Pond Turtle Population Status and Response to A Quantitative Life Cycle Model for Chinook Salmon in
Aseasonal Flows in the San Joaquin River
Battle Creek, CA
Earl Gonsolin
Paul S. Bergman
4:00
Asymmetric introgression among Coastal
Cutthroat Trout and steelhead within the
Smith River Basin
Sam F. Rizza
Application of Two-Dimensional Hydraulic Models
in Riparian Community Function Analysis
Recent hybridization of a Colorado River Delta endemic
silverside, Colpichthys hubbsi
Jarvis A Caldwell
Dave Jacobs
Relative importance of river flow, ocean conditions,
and hatchery practices on early ocean growth and
overall survival of Central Valley fall-run Chinook
Megan Sabal
Does freshwater growth limit Coho Salmon
(Oncorhynchus kisutch ) ocean survival? A
comparison of results from scale back-calculation
and from PIT tag data
Butte Creek spring-run Chinook salmon prespawning mortality. What are the causes and
consequences?
Climate change projections on management-relevant
scales: Coupling local-scale models of water
temperatures to maturation of Delta Smelt
A dynamic factor analysis to estimate common trends
in juvenile Chinook Salmon growth variability:
describing the freshwater experience
Sean M Cochran
Flora Cordoleani
Larry R. Brown
Pascale Goertler
Sex ratio variation determines the ecological
impacts of mosquitofish populations
Downstream migration success of hatchery-reared
Feather River steelhead
Mediating water temperature increases due to livestock Factors influencing the behavior and duration of
and global change in high elevation meadow streams of residence of adult Chinook salmon in a stratified
the Golden Trout Wilderness
estuary
David C. Fryxell
Andrew Hampton
Sebastien Nussle
4:20
4:40
6-7 pm
7-10pm
TH
Trisha Parker-Hamelberg
Linking human activity to the deep sea:
anthropogenic impacts in the twilight zone
3:00
Time
Resource Center for Nonviolence
CAL-NEVA 49 ANNUAL MEETING
7. Chinook Salmon
J.D. Wikert
Joshua S. Strange
Pre-Banquet Social - Hotel Paradox Pool deck
Banquet, Awards and Raffle - Sequoia A-C
Thursday Afternoon
3
April 10 Morning
Hotel Paradox
Sequoia A
Time
8. Monitoring Matters: Making
Informed Management Decisions
Sequoia B
9. Estuaries and Lagoons:
10. Challenges and Applications for
Ocean-Watershed Linkages in a
Salmonid Recovery in Highly Altered
Changing Climate
Systems
Christina Toms
Cynthia LeDoux-Bloom
Heather McIntire
8:00
8:20
8:40
9:00
9:20
9:40
The A.R.M. of the Central Valley Project
Improvement Act: putting science into action
An inventory and classification of U.S. West
Coast estuaries
10:40
11:20
Michelle Workman
Assessing vulnerability of Pacific salmon to
climate-driven changes in riverine thermal
heterogeneity
Bay gobies as a model of evolution and
endangerment in California estuaries
Aimee H. Fullerton
David K. Jacobs
What current monitoring can and cannot tell us
about drought and drought-related management
effects on Central Valley winter-run Chinook
Salmon.
Brett N. Harvey
12. Monitoring, Management and
Metapopulation
Effects of invasive Red Swamp Crayfish on
Southern Steelhead Trout habitat in Topanga
Creek.
Crystal Garcia
Break
13. Technologies and Techniques
Russell Barabe
14. Human-Assisted Methods for Fish
Reintroduction
Developing sensory-based bycatch reduction
technologies for gillnet fisheries
Using Southern California Steelhead monitoring
and research to inform management activities
Evaluation of the standardized electrofishing
Options for restoration of salmon populations at
project for the Upper Colorado River Endangered very low abundance
Fish Recovery Program
James B. Reynolds
John Carlos Garza
Joel T. Barkan
Katherine D. McLaughlin
Year-round drought monitoring, impacts, and
rescues of McCloud River redband trout
Michael Dege
Management Tools To Mitigate Drought Effects in
The Lower Mokelumne River
Jose D. Setka
Early warning monitoring to detect Delta Smelt
movement during drought
Matt Dekar
Salmonid monitoring successfully assisted flow
management in Clear Creek, CA during a drought.
Matt Brown
15. Monitoring and Mitigating Impacts
from California's Continuing Drought
Rhonda Reed / Carlos Garza
Managing for more: large woody material in
Santa Cruz County streams for Steelhead and
Coho Salmon habitat
Kristen Kittleson
Dana McCanne
11:00
from California's Continuing Drought
2014 Drought Monitoring and Response in Santa
Barbara and Ventura Counties
Heather McIntire
10:20
Auditorium
11. Monitoring and Mitigating Impacts
Genetic analysis of steelhead/rainbow trout,
Oncorhynchus mykiss : patterns, processes, and
recovery planning in highly modified landscapes
Cesar C. Blanco
Kevin O'Connor
Devon E. Pearse
Using Chinook salmon fisheries and escapement New resource inventory strategy for California's Survival improvements at Fish Guidance Systems
monitoring data to guide sustainable fishery
bar-built estuaries and its value for fish
designed to improve safe downstream passage of
management decisions
management
anadromous and catadromous fish
Jennifer Simon
Ross Clark
Shane Scott
Monitoring for management mojo: making the
Potential impacts of climate change on
Salmon feeding strategies and the bioenergetic
most of the Central Valley Angler Survey
California coastal lagoon habitat
modeling of juvenile Chinook salmon growth
during a drought in the San Joaquin River,
California
Rob Titus
Dane Behrens
Taylor
Spaulding
Real-time monitoring of anadromous fishes in
Importance of marine derived nutrients for
San Francisco Bay: making use of a big estuarywatershed with acoustical array for more
juvenile steelhead reared in seasonal coastal
California Chinook Salmon fry and salty water
effective management
lagoons
A. Peter Klimley
Alison L. Collins
Yvette Redler
Monitoring California native trout under
California drought causes apparent loss of
Effects of prolonged drought on the benthic
extended drought conditions
steelhead estuarine nursery habitat
macroinvertebrate community of Topanga Creek
and potential implications for Southern California
Steelhead Trout
David Lentz
Eric Huber
Elizabeth Montgomery
10:00
Time
Resource Center for Nonviolence
Sequoia C
Genetic broodstock management of endangered
coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch): a tale of
two conservation hatchery programs
Elizabeth A. Gilbert-Horvath
Michelle Workman
Synthesizing Drought Effects on Delta Smelt and
Their Habitat: Application of a Conceptual Model
Louise Conrad
To truck or not to truck - development, use, and
assessment of Coleman National Fish Hatchery
trucking triggers in an extreme drought year
James (Jim) G. Smith
Developing objectives for Stanislaus River
Using Bayesian state-space models to quantify
salmonids: the San Joaquin Tributary Settlement movement through isoscapes: Life-history
Process Science Evaluation Process
diversity in migrations of imperiled salmon
Re-inventing Fish Passage - the Whooshh Way
Drought decisions in a highly impacted California
River: Using umbrella species to inform water
management
John M. Shelton
Corey C. Phillis
Vincent E. Bryan
Kirsten L. Sellheim
Temporal genetic analysis of the endangered
Tidewater Goby: metapopulation dynamics or
drift in isolation?
Large and small scale fisheries applications of
Passive Integrated Transponder tags and new
IS1001-MTS reader system
Resistance Board Weir - a versatile fisheries
management tool with applications worldwide
Drought effects on the Scott Creek bar-built estuary
and the implications for life history expression by
endangered coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch )
Andrew Kinziger
Steve Anglea
Jesse T. Anderson
Ann-Marie K. Osterback
11:45 - 1:30
CalNeva AFS Business Meeting - Resource Center for Nonviolence
Friday Morning
TH
CAL-NEVA 49 ANNUAL MEETING
4
April 10 Afternoon
Hotel Paradox
Time
Sequoia A
Sequoia B
Sequoia C
16. Sandy Watersheds, Salmonids,
and Salamanders: The Linkage
17. Causes and Consequences of
Life History Evolution:
Where Ecology and Evolution Collide
18. Defining Fish Habitat
Eric Palcovacs / Joe Merz
Joe Merz / Sean Gallagher
Denis Ruttenberg / Barry Hecht
Sandy watersheds and their habitat hydrology
Rapid formation of population genetic structure and Defining fish habitat from a geomorphic perspective
life history evolution following the introduction and
establishment of a non-native anadromous fish
Barry Hecht
What we have learned about managing sandy
soils in the San Lorenzo River Watershed
Daniel J. Hasselman
Michael P. Beakes
Trends in portfolio effect strength and hatchery
Deviation in Coho Salmon life history strategies and
supplementation practices in Central Valley fall-run freshwater habitats in Coastal Northern California
Chinook Salmon
John A. Ricker
Stephanie M. Carlson
Sean P. Gallagher
Chambered flow in the Canyon del Rey
watershed, time scales of movement in relation
to management and ecology
Life history changes in Blue Rockfish, Sebastes
mystinus, before and after overfishing.
Dynamic habitat needs and behavioral responses along
the river continuum
Denis Ruttenberg
Narrow windows in sandy streams
Katherine Schmidt
Adaptive variation associated with Oncorhynchus
mykiss life-history strategies (residency vs.
anadromy) along its geographic range
Katherine N. McElroy
Emigrating Salmonid Habitat Estimation (ESHE): A webbased tool for estimating habitat needs for
outmigrating juvenile salmonids
Devin Best
Alicia Abadia-Cardoso
Travis M. Hinkelman
1:40
2:00
2:20
2:40
3:00
3:20
Break
Historical ecology of wetlands in north Monterey Quantifying juvenile phenotype expression and
Juvenile Chinook salmon growth and diet patterns in
County
success of Chinook salmon in a regulated river: who mainstem habitats within the San Joaquin River
survives and why?
Restoration Program
Andrea Woolfolk
3:40
4:00
Anna M. Sturrock
Progress and challenges of managing the 'upside Biophysical potential for anadromous life-history
down' Salinas River for public safety, water, and expression of steelhead
wildlife
Paul Robins
David A. Boughton
Steve Blumenshine
Seasonal rearing habitat in a large Mediterraneanclimate river - management implications at the
southern extent of Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.)
Joe Merz
Restoration of fluvial processes, floodplains, and Density-mediates effects of steelhead/rainbow
habitat in lower Butano Creek
trout on stream ecosystems
Chris Hammersmark
Corey C. Phillis
Friday Afternoon
CAL-NEVA 49TH ANNUAL MEETING
5